The man who is said to be responsible for Nelson Mandela's
wardrobe, Yusuf Surtee, was mentioned several times in the Schabir Shaik fraud
and corruption trial in the Durban High Court on Monday.

Surtee, also known as "the tailor" is alleged to be
the person responsible for short-listing potential bidders in the government's
multi-billion rand arms deal.*

The State's fifth witness, forensic expert Johan van der Walt,
from auditors KPMG said that on November 18, 1998, Parliament decided that the
German Frigate Consortium was a preferred bidder in the arms deal.

The court heard that Thomson-CSF was involved in the this
consortium through African Defence Systems (ADS).

Nkobi and Thomson-CSF had a joint shareholding in ADS.

van der Walt said the relevance of Surtee and Mandela were
evident in a letter by Thomson boss Pierre Moynot dated October 31, 1997, which
was close to the time when a decision was made about the government's corvette
tenders.

In this letter Moynot says that Surtee appeared to be closer to
Mandela than previously thought.

van der Walt said the person referred to as "the
tailor" was possibly Surtee from documents in his possession but could also
be the person who shut down a number of bids in drawing up a shortlist in the
arms deal.

Shaik's advocate Francois van Zyl confirmed that one of the
State's witnesses, Marion Marais, said last week that Surtee's code name was
"the tailor".

Marais was the secretary to Alain Thetard, the southern African
director of Thomson CSF, now known as Thint.

With acknowledgement to Sapa.

* The question is " how is The Tailor's involvement in the
selection of preferred bidders compatible with the constitutional obligation of
all organs of state (which includes the Department of Defence) in the national,
provincial and local spheres of government, or any other institution identified
in national legislation (which includes Armscor), to contract for goods or
services in accordance with a system which is "fair, equitable,
transparent, competitive and cost-effective” ?